Premium video – Videonet https://www.v-net.tv TV and Video Analysis Tue, 12 Sep 2023 15:46:50 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.25 https://www.v-net.tv/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Videonet-favicon_517x517px-32x32.png Premium video – Videonet https://www.v-net.tv 32 32 Vevo stresses its audience incrementality, and shows the NewFronts some smart contextual matching https://www.v-net.tv/2023/05/30/vevo-stresses-its-audience-incrementality-and-shows-the-newfronts-some-smart-contextual-matching/ Tue, 30 May 2023 16:28:55 +0000 https://www.v-net.tv/?p=19726 Vevo views itself as an important complement to broadcast TV campaigns as advertisers look to extend reach using premium video and increasingly connected TV, especially into the 18-34 demographic. Speaking shortly after the IAB NewFronts earlier this month, Kevin McGurn, President, Sales & Distribution at Vevo, pointed out that “our cross-screen reach is no less than one-third of every country we operate in – and in the U.S. we reach 65 million people on television.” He added: “We offer incremental reach on top of broadcast TV. Our research in the U.S. shows that we have stunning incremental reach even for advertisers who have a large tonnage on television.”

Vevo represents the music labels, and offers a VOD catalogue of 800,000 titles as well as FAST channels, with its content available through multiple platforms including Samsung TV Plus, Roku, Apple, Amazon and also Pay TV platforms like Sky Q. Vevo on YouTube accounts for a large part of the reach for the music-focused programmer. McGurn describes Vevo as a ‘high reach, low frequency’ solution for advertisers, with that characteristic largely a result of how people watch music videos.

“This is what advertisers come to us for: reach extension with moderate frequency,” he declares. “What is interesting about campaigns on Vevo, from advertisers across consumer electronics to film and auto insurance, is that no matter what you buy from us, we deliver the audience, but frequency never reaches above three. That speaks to the diversity of the video offer. For one advertiser, we had to narrow the reach to dial-up the frequency they wanted, but I think it is a better challenge to increase frequency than deal with too much frequency.”

Vevo has rapidly expanded its FAST channel offering and viewers can now find up to 15 of these linear (ad supported) streamed channels on a typical connected TV platform. This is a lean-back, curated experience and because the channels are genre-based (spanning Pop to Hip-Hop, Country and Latino, for example) or decade-based (e.g., ‘80s or ‘90s) advertisers can reach largely different groups of people via each channel. “There is massive incrementality – as much as 95% incrementality,” reveals McGurn, drawing on research that Vevo presented at the IAB NewFronts in New York.

For consumers, FAST is about removing the decisions needed every four minutes on what to watch next, McGurn says. “It is too much work to constantly choose, and with the curated channels you have passive playback and if you don’t like what is on one channel, you can go to another. We can still keep them [the viewer] on the Vevo network. For us, it is also fun. We like being a curator and that is what the music industry expects from us – we are supposed to be promoters of new music and fandom.”

Asked if Vevo would like to be more than an app on Pay TV/MVPD platforms, in the way that direct-to-consumer streamers like Disney and Netflix are being deeply integrated into the home screen content promotions today, McGurn would only say that “we know our content will be popular wherever it sits, but it is not for us to decide how it should be promoted.” He did admit interest in Vevo appearing within broadcaster streaming (BVOD) services, as some broadcasters start to include third-party content. Vevo is not found in any primary BVOD services yet, “but I would see us as a great content addition in that environment.”

Another part of the Vevo ‘pitch’ to advertisers this year is its increasing understanding of context, down to the detail of what appears within scenes in music videos. This is then used to better match advertising to content. The company already offered mood-based advertising (since February 2021, when advertisers could start buying against moods like ‘heartfelt’ or ‘empowering’, for example). Most recently the company added the ability to match advertising creative to the ‘creative’ look-and-feel of a music video.

Colours, and even the beat of music, can be matched to ads. One illustration shown privately used a music beat and colour-feel that fed exceptionally well into an ad for an electric car. This is better seen than explained, but McGurn gives an example that is easy to imagine: you have an ad creative that is half-human and half-animated, and it might match well against the famous Aha video for Take on Me.

With the help of an AI tech partner, Vevo has also processed its entire music catalogue to find every example where a music video contains a brand representation, whether a coke bottle or a Cadillac car. This has been used to create a targeting package where brands can advertise against the content that contains these images. This is part of a second-by-second analysis of each video to uncover and then label elements of interest, whether logos, items or themes. Advertising packages can also be created for videos tagged with the same keywords – and the example given is ‘beach’ and ‘party’ to create a ‘beach party’ viewing hour, with brand sponsorship available.

McGurn admits the AI-enabled video intelligence does not foretell a tectonic shift in the advertising industry – but it does match advertiser desires for advertising UX innovation. He observes that Vevo can invest in this kind of innovation because its content is evergreen. Sweet Child O’ Mine (Guns N’ Roses) received approximately 200 million views across the Vevo network last year, as one illustration of his point.

“You could not do this with television shows because everyone watches them and then they’re done, albeit with some later binge viewing. With music videos, we know the viewing and the ad revenues will be the same in ten years’ time, using the same insights.”

]]>
Swiss piracy shutdown demonstrates the power of collaboration https://www.v-net.tv/2020/11/20/swiss-piracy-shutdown-demonstrates-the-power-of-collaboration/ Fri, 20 Nov 2020 08:30:50 +0000 https://www.v-net.tv/?p=16624 Canal+ Group, the subscription channel and platform provider, and digital security specialist Kudelski Group have announced the shutdown of a piracy organisation based in Canton of Vaud in Switzerland (in the Lake Geneva region) that delivered French-speaking on-demand content to thousands of customers. The operation is the result of a criminal complaint from Canal+ Group and NAGRA, the digital TV division of the Kudelski Group, to the Vaud Police, which led the effort with the support of Europol, the law enforcement agency of the European Union, and Eurojust, the European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation. This is said to be the first piracy shutdown of its kind in Switzerland.

The pirate network, called KBoxServ, provided access to a catalogue featuring more than 77,000 TV episodes and 7,000 movies. The service was actively promoted on social networks including Facebook and Instagram, boasting thousands of followers. IPTV devices, pre-configured to give lifetime access to protected content, were sold online and through multiple retail shops across Switzerland and France for approximately 150 CHF (approx. $US160) each.

The pirated content was distributed through servers located in various European countries, including Switzerland, France, Germany and the Netherlands. The pirate organization had full control over these servers, was constantly updating their VOD catalogue of stolen content and even serving advertisements to its subscribers.

Pascal Métral, VP Legal Affairs and Head of Anti-Piracy Investigations, Intelligence and Litigation at NAGRA, says: “This shutdown is yet another example of how close collaboration between content producers and owners, governmental entities and anti-piracy companies can bring tangible results in the fight against commercial piracy. KBoxServ is a true pirate broadcasting station that has now been dismantled – an organization that has been broadcasting stolen premium content to thousands of users for years in exchange for high profits. We thank the cybercrime unit of Vaud Police for leading this operation and for supporting us and our customers in this effort.”

“We appreciate the support of the Vaud Police and all organizations that were involved in bringing down this operation,” adds Céline Boyer, Head of Content protection, Canal+ Group and Brice Daumin Director of Canal+ Switzerland. “The Kudelski Group has been a valuable partner in the fight against piracy on a global level to help us not only protect content owner rights but ensure we can continue to deliver high-quality content to our subscribers. Together, we are sending a clear sign that piracy of protected content is theft.”

]]>